One Dollar, One Tube Radio, 1935

Mar35RadioCraft

Eighty years ago this month, March 1935, Radio Craft magazine featured this one-tube broadcast radio that could be built for a dollar. The only manufactured radio part was the type 30 tube, which ate up 75 cents of the budget. Everything else was scrounged from household goods. The author reported receiving a station in Dallas, 1500 miles away from his location, the first night.

The two fixed condensers were made of tinfoil and waxed paper. The filament condenser consisted of 36 feet of 36 gauge wire wound on a spool. The grid leak condenser, which would probably be about 1 megohm, consisted of a pencil mark on a piece of wood. The tuning condenser consisted of two metal plates separated by celophane. The tuning coil was home wound on a cardboard form, and the tube socket was four paper clips.

The diagram of the completed receiver is shown below.

DollarRadioDiagram



One thought on “One Dollar, One Tube Radio, 1935

  1. Beda

    I built that radio up to last detail, even bought the type 30 tube ( 1930s vintage vacuum tube). It really works! You have to build it as close to the original including the right construction of parts. I used a high impedance headset also a vintage era type just the guy’s using. Great weekend project!

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